Everything about Onions totally explained
Onion is a term used by many plants in the genus
Allium. They are known by the common name "onion" but, used without qualifiers, it usually refers to
Allium cepa.
Allium cepa is also known as the
'garden onion' or '
bulb' onion and '
shallot'.
Allium cepa is known only in cultivation, but related wild species occur in Central Asia. The most closely-related species include
Allium vavilovii Popov & Vved. and
Allium asarense R.M. Fritsch & Matin from Iran. However Zohary and Hopf warn that "there are doubts whether the
vavilovii collections tested represent genuine wild material or only feral derivatives of the crop."
Uses
Onions, one of the oldest vegetables known to mankind, are found in a bewildering array of recipes and preparations, spanning almost the totality of the world's cultures; they're nowadays available in fresh, frozen, canned, pickled, and dehydrated forms. Onions can be used, usually chopped or sliced, in almost every type of food, including cooked foods and fresh salads, and as a spicy garnish; they're rarely eaten on their own but usually act as accompaniment to the main course. Depending on the variety, an onion can be sharp, spicy, tangy and pungent or mild and sweet. also they make you cry from the sulfuric acid inside of the layers.
Onions pickled in vinegar are eaten as a snack. These are often served as a side serving in fish and chip shops throughout the
United Kingdom. Onions are a
staple food in
India, and are therefore fundamental to
Indian cooking. They are commonly used as a base for
curries, or made into a
paste and eaten as a main course or as a side dish.
Tissue from onions is frequently used in
science education to demonstrate
microscope usage, because they've particularly large cells which are readily observed even at low magnifications.
Historical uses
It is thought that bulbs from the onion family have been used as a food source for millennia. In Caananite
Bronze Age settlements, traces of onion remains were found alongside
fig and
date stones dating back to 5000 BC. Onion is native to
South Asia, and is widely used in
Indian cuisine.
However, it isn't clear if these were cultivated onions. Archaeological and literary evidence such as the
Book of Numbers 11:5 suggests cultivation probably took place around two thousand years later in
ancient Egypt, at the same time that
leeks and
garlic were cultivated. Workers who built the
Egyptian pyramids may have been fed
radishes and onions. believing that its spherical shape and concentric rings symbolized eternal life. Onions were even used in Egyptian burials as evidenced by onion traces being found in the eye sockets of
Ramesses IV. They believed that if buried with the dead, the strong scent of onions would bring breath back to the dead.
In ancient
Greece, athletes ate large quantities of onion because it was believed that it would lighten the balance of blood. Roman
gladiators were rubbed down with onion to firm up their muscles. In the
Middle Ages onions were such an important food that people would pay for their rent with onions and even give them as gifts.
Medicinal properties and health benefits
Wide-ranging claims have been made for the effectiveness of onions against conditions ranging from the common cold to heart disease,
diabetes,
osteoporosis, and other diseases. They contain chemical compounds believed to have
anti-inflammatory, anticholesterol, anticancer, and
antioxidant properties such as
quercetin. However, it hasn't been demonstrated that increased consumption of onions is directly linked to health benefits.
In many parts of the world, onions are used to heal blisters and
boils. A traditional
Maltese remedy for
sea urchin wounds is to tie half a baked onion to the afflicted area overnight. In the morning, the spikes will be in the onion. In the
United States, products that contain onion extract are used in the treatment of topical scars; some studies have found their action to be ineffective, while others found that they may act as an anti-inflammatory or bacteriostatic and can improve collagen organization in rabbits.
Onions may be especially beneficial for women, who are at increased risk for
osteoporosis as they go through menopause, by destroying
osteoclasts so that they don't break down bone.
Onions and eye irritation
As onions are sliced,
cells are broken, allowing
enzymes called
alliinases to break down
amino acid sulphoxides and generate
sulphenic acids. Sulphenic acids are unstable and spontaneously rearrange into a volatile
gas called
syn-propanethial-S-oxide. The gas diffuses through the air and eventually reaches the eye, where it reacts with the water to form a diluted solution of
sulphuric acid. This acid irritates the
nerve endings in the
eye, making them sting. Tear glands produce tears to dilute and flush out the irritant.
Supplying ample water to the reaction or chewing gum while peeling onions prevents the gas from reaching the eyes. Eye irritation can, therefore, be avoided by cutting onions under running water or submerged in a basin of water. Rinsing the onion and leaving it wet while chopping may also be effective. Another way to avoid irritation is by not cutting off the root of the onion, or by doing it last, as the root of the onion has a higher concentration of enzymes. Using a sharp blade to chop onions will limit the cell damage and the release of enzymes that drive the irritation response. (Having a sharp knife and keeping the root of a halved onion on until the end also reduces the risk of cutting yourself if your knife slips). Chilling or freezing onions prevents the enzymes from activating, limiting the amount of gas generated. Having a fire, such as a candle or a burner, will help as the heat and flames will draw in the onion gas, burn it, and then send it up with the rest of the flame exhaust. In the heat, the chemical changes such that it no longer irritates the eyes.
The volume of sulfenic acids released, and the irritation effect, differs among
Allium species.
On
January 31,
2008, the
New Zealand Crop and Food institute led by Colin Eady created 'no tears' onions by using Australian
gene-silencing
biotechnology.
Propagation
Onions may be grown from seed or, most commonly, from sets. Onion sets are produced by sowing seed very thickly one year, resulting in stunted plants which produce very small bulbs. These bulbs are very easy to set out and grow into mature bulbs the following year, but they've the reputation of producing a less durable bulb than onions grown directly from seed and thinned.
Either planting method may be used to produce spring onions or green onions, which are onions harvested while immature. Green onion is a name also used to refer to
Allium fistulosum, the
Welsh onion, which is said not to produce dry bulbs.
Varieties
Image:Two colors of onions.jpg|Brown and white onions
Image:YellowOnions.jpg|Yellow Onions
Image:Onion Flower Head.jpg|Flower head of a yellow onion
Image:ARS_red_onion.jpg|Red onions
- Bulb onion - Grown from seed (or onion sets), bulb onions range from the pungent varieties used for dried soups and onion powder to the mild and hearty sweet onions, such as the Vidalia from Georgia or Walla Walla from Washington that can be sliced and eaten on a sandwich instead of meat.
- Multiplier onions - Raised from bulbs which produce multiple shoots, each of which forms a bulb.
- Tree onion or Egyptian onion - Produce bulblets in the flower head; a hybrid of Allium cepas.
- Welsh onion or Green onion
Shallots and ten other onion (Allium cepa L.) varieties commonly available in the United States were evaluated: Western Yellow, Northern Red, New York Bold, Western White, Peruvian Sweet, Empire Sweet, Mexico, Texas 1015, Imperial Valley Sweet, and Vidalia. In general, the most pungent onions delivered many times the benefits of their milder cousins.
Shallots have the most
phenols, six times the amount found in Vidalia onion, the variety with the lowest phenolic content. Shallots also have the most
antioxidant activity, followed by Western Yellow, New York Bold, Northern Red, Mexico, Empire Sweet, Western White, Peruvian Sweet, Texas 1015, Imperial Valley Sweet, and Vidalia. Western Yellow onions have the most
flavonoids, eleven times the amount found in Western White, the variety with the lowest flavonoid content.
For all varieties of onions, the more phenols and flavonoids they contain, the more antioxidant and anti-cancer activity they provide. When tested against liver and colon cancer cells, Western Yellow, New York Bold and shallots were most effective in inhibiting their growth. The milder-tasting varieties—Western White, Peruvian Sweet, Empire Sweet, Mexico, Texas 1015, Imperial Valley Sweet, and Vidalia—showed little cancer-fighting ability.
Production trends
Top Ten Onions Producers — 2005 (1000 tonnes) |
| |
19,793 |
| |
5,500 |
| |
3,346 |
| |
2,220 |
| |
1,764 |
| |
1,758 |
| |
1,750 |
| |
1,637 |
| |
1,302 |
| |
1,149 |
| World Total |
64,101 |
Source: UN Food & Agriculture Organisation (FAO)(External Link ) |
Onions in language
In the
English vernacular, "an onion" is a difficult situation, the use stemming from the onion's tendency to irritate or inflame the
eyes. Conversely, the term "onion" can be used to describe any state of being, as in the phrase, "[someone] really dices my onion!" It may also represent an object of many layers.
In some Scots dialects, onion is pronounced 'Ingin'.
Feminist poet
Carol Ann Duffy uses the onion as a metaphor of love and relationships in her poem "Valentine" (1993), one of the poems in her collection "Mean time"
Expressions referring to "layers of the onion" evoke the process of peeling back the layers of something (a person, reality, etc.), without however reaching a core - the centre of the onion being simply another layer. The metaphor is thus used to challenge the notion that there's a core/essence 'behind' surface layers, stressing the continuity between layer and core. Due to the number of layers in an onion it can also be used simply to evoke complexity - something having 'many layers', or 'always another layer behind this one".
This idea was used (& twisted) in the first
Shrek movie, (
Dreamworks LLC), when Shrek tries to explain to his partner, Donkey, that he's a complex person by telling him that 'Ogres are like onions.' (meaning that they've layers), to which Donkey replies 'Oh I get it. You leave them out in the sun too long and they go all brown and start sprouting little white hairs!'
In other languages too the onion has acquired different connotations, eg., amongst the Khasi tribe in North East India, Onion or "piat" in the local dialect refers to someone who is present everywhere or in every social gathering.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Onions'.
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